B Mitra1,2,3, M Fitzgerald4,5,6,7, M Raoofi6, G A Tan4,7, J C Spencer4, C Atkin6. 1. Emergency and Trauma Centre, The Alfred Hospital, Commercial Rd., Melbourne, VIC, 3004, Australia. b.mitra@alfred.org.au. 2. Department of Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia. b.mitra@alfred.org.au. 3. National Trauma Research Institute, Melbourne, Australia. b.mitra@alfred.org.au. 4. Emergency and Trauma Centre, The Alfred Hospital, Commercial Rd., Melbourne, VIC, 3004, Australia. 5. National Trauma Research Institute, Melbourne, Australia. 6. Trauma Service, The Alfred Hospital, Melbourne, Australia. 7. Central Clinical School, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Pancreatic enzymes are routinely measured during reception of trauma patients to assess for pancreatic injury despite conflicting evidence on their utility. The aim of this study was to investigate the utility of routine initial serum lipase measurement for the diagnosis of acute pancreatic trauma. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Lipase measurements were introduced as part of the trauma pathology panel and requested on all patients who presented to an adult major trauma service and met trauma call-out criteria. Clinical records of these patients were extracted from the trauma registry and retrospectively reviewed. The performance of an initial serum lipase level measured on presentation to detect pancreatic trauma was determined. RESULTS: There were 2,580 patients included in the study, with 17 patients diagnosed with pancreatic trauma. An elevated lipase was recorded in 390 patients. Statistically significant associations were observed for elevated lipase in patients with pancreatic trauma, head injury, acute alcohol ingestion and massive blood transfusion. As a test for pancreatic trauma, an abnormal serum lipase result had a specificity of 85.3 % (95 % CI 83.8-86.6), sensitivity of 76.5 % (95 % CI 49.8-92.2), positive predictive value of 3.3 % (95 % CI 1.8-5.8) and negative predictive value of 99.8 % (95 % CI 99.4-99.9). Higher cut-offs of serum lipase did not result in better performance. CONCLUSIONS: A normal serum lipase result can be a useful adjunct to exclude pancreatic injury. A positive lipase result, regardless of the cut-off used, was not reliably associated with pancreatic trauma, and should not be used to guide further assessment.
PURPOSE: Pancreatic enzymes are routinely measured during reception of traumapatients to assess for pancreatic injury despite conflicting evidence on their utility. The aim of this study was to investigate the utility of routine initial serum lipase measurement for the diagnosis of acute pancreatic trauma. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Lipase measurements were introduced as part of the trauma pathology panel and requested on all patients who presented to an adult major trauma service and met trauma call-out criteria. Clinical records of these patients were extracted from the trauma registry and retrospectively reviewed. The performance of an initial serum lipase level measured on presentation to detect pancreatic trauma was determined. RESULTS: There were 2,580 patients included in the study, with 17 patients diagnosed with pancreatic trauma. An elevated lipase was recorded in 390 patients. Statistically significant associations were observed for elevated lipase in patients with pancreatic trauma, head injury, acute alcohol ingestion and massive blood transfusion. As a test for pancreatic trauma, an abnormal serum lipase result had a specificity of 85.3 % (95 % CI 83.8-86.6), sensitivity of 76.5 % (95 % CI 49.8-92.2), positive predictive value of 3.3 % (95 % CI 1.8-5.8) and negative predictive value of 99.8 % (95 % CI 99.4-99.9). Higher cut-offs of serum lipase did not result in better performance. CONCLUSIONS: A normal serum lipase result can be a useful adjunct to exclude pancreatic injury. A positive lipase result, regardless of the cut-off used, was not reliably associated with pancreatic trauma, and should not be used to guide further assessment.
Authors: Biswadev Mitra; Peter A Cameron; Russell L Gruen; Alfredo Mori; Mark Fitzgerald; Alison Street Journal: Eur J Emerg Med Date: 2011-06 Impact factor: 2.799
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Authors: Federico Coccolini; Leslie Kobayashi; Yoram Kluger; Ernest E Moore; Luca Ansaloni; Walt Biffl; Ari Leppaniemi; Goran Augustin; Viktor Reva; Imitiaz Wani; Andrew Kirkpatrick; Fikri Abu-Zidan; Enrico Cicuttin; Gustavo Pereira Fraga; Carlos Ordonez; Emmanuil Pikoulis; Maria Grazia Sibilla; Ron Maier; Yosuke Matsumura; Peter T Masiakos; Vladimir Khokha; Alain Chichom Mefire; Rao Ivatury; Francesco Favi; Vassil Manchev; Massimo Sartelli; Fernando Machado; Junichi Matsumoto; Massimo Chiarugi; Catherine Arvieux; Fausto Catena; Raul Coimbra Journal: World J Emerg Surg Date: 2019-12-11 Impact factor: 5.469